A seed project for custom Four51 Solutions built on AngularJS
Node.js is required for the following node package manager (npm) tasks. If you don't have node.js installed, you can download it here.
$ npm install
$ gulp build
You should now have a few more directories in your project.
OrderCloud/
|- build/
|- node_modules/
|- bower_components/
WebStorm is our chosen development IDE. It provides an interface for the capabilities of the seed projects configuration.
Once you've installed the prerequisites and run your gulp build you can setup and run your Karma tests.
Create a Run configuration using the Karma plugin with the following settings:
Node interpreter: C:\Program Files (x86)\nodejs\node.exe
Karma package: C:\Four51\WebFiles\SPASites\defaults\OrderCloud\node_modules\karma
Configuration file: C:\Four51\WebFiles\SPASites\defaults\OrderCloud\build\karma-unit.js
At a high level, the structure looks roughly like this:
OrderCloud/
|- gulp/
|- node_modules/
|- src/
| |- app/
| | |- <application code>
| |- assets/
| | |- <static files>
| |- index.html
|- bower_components/
| |- <bower components>
|- bower.json
|- gulp.config.js
|- gulpfile.js
|- server.js
|- package.json
This section provides a little more detailed understanding of what goes into
getting OrderCloud
up and running. Though OrderCloud
is really simple
to use, it might help to have an understanding of the tools involved here, like
Node.js and Gulp and Bower. If you're completely new to highly organized,
modern JavaScript development, take a few short minutes to read this overview
of the tools before continuing with this section.
Here it is:
OrderCloud
uses Gulp as its build system, so
Node.js is required.
Install the build dependencies locally:
$ npm install
This will read the dependencies
(empty by default) and the devDependencies
(which contains our build requirements) from package.json
and install
everything needed into a folder called node_modules/
.
There are many Bower packages used by OrderCloud
, like AngularJS and the
OrderCloud-Angular-SDK, which are listed in bower.js
. To install them into the
vendor/
directory, simply run:
**This is already installed after running $ npm install
$ bower install
In the future, should you want to add a new Bower package to your app, run the
install
command and add --save
to save the dependency in your bower.json file:
$ bower install packagename --save
The --save
flag tells Bower to add the package at its current version to
our project's bower.js
file so should another developer download our
application (or we download it from a different computer), we can simply run the
bower install
command as above and all our dependencies will be installed for
us. Neat!
Technically, OrderCloud
is now ready to go.
To ensure your setup works, build your application and then run it with the following commands:
$ gulp build
The built files are placed in the build/
directory by default. And you application
should automatically open in the browser window on a localhost!
watch
actually starts a few other processes in the background to help you develop your
application. Using browser-sync
and some built in gulp functions the app is now watching
for changes in your source directory. Should you make any changes to your html or js files
the app should automatically reload your application with the appropriate changes. Also
if you make any changes to your style sheets (less or css) the app will rebuild those changes
and inject them directly into the application, without reloading the entire page!
When you're ready to push your app into production, just run the compile
command:
$ gulp compile
This will concatenate and minify your sources and place them by default into the
compile/
directory. There will only be three files (excluding assets): index.html
,
OrderCloud.js
, and OrderCloud.css
. All of the vendor dependencies like
AngularJS styles and the OrderCloud-SDK itself have been added to them for super-easy
deploying. If you use any assets (src/assets/
) then they will be copied to
compile/
as is.
Lastly, a complete build is always available by simply running the default
task, which runs build
and then compile
:
$ gulp